Cuba Deal Exposed
Published on November 1, 2012
President
John Mahama has sparked a serious controversy on the actual cost being
borne by government in training 250 Ghanaian medical students in Cuba in
a deal he brokered last year.
According to the
president, the cost of training of each of the Ghanaians in Cuba is
$5,000 (GH¢10million) instead of the GH¢50,000 per year being quoted by
various sources including government documents.
Government has quoted GH¢50,000, with cabinet memos putting the entire deal to GH¢60million.
The president's submission has drawn extreme discomfort from the Ghana Medical Association (GMA).
Dr.
Kwabena Opoku Adusei, President of GMA, told DAILY GUIDE in a telephone
conversation on yesterday evening, "The figures don't tally, somebody
is not telling the truth.
"There were figures before
the debate and you look at those figures and you look at what His
Excellency said, then it means there is something wrong somewhere."
The
discrepancy emerged at the widely publicized Institute of Economic
Affairs (IEA) Presidential Debate held in Tamale on Tuesday.
President Mahama was compelled to come clean with the actual figures involved in the Ghana-Cuban medical training deal.
Mid
May this year, the Alliance for Accountable Governance (AFAG), a pro
NPP pressure group, blew the lid on the healthcare deal when government
sources were cited as concluding plans to commit approximately GH¢50,
000 per annum to train each of the 250 medical students.
President
Mahama, who was caught in a back and forth banter with the NPP
candidate during the healthcare session of the debate, explained that
the cost for training the medical personnel in Cuba was $5,000
(approximately GH¢10, 000), instead of the GH¢50, 000 a year that had
been widely quoted.
"The cost of training one child
under the Cuban arrangement is $5,000, far lower than the cost of
training in our medical school here and so we had to take that
opportunity," President Mahama explained.
A "secret"
cabinet memo from former Health Minister Joseph Yieleh Chireh, dated
August 18, 2011, which was approved by Chief of Staff John Henry Martey
Newman, gave evidence of government officials justifying an amount of
Cuc30, 750.00, or an equivalent of GH¢50, 660.12 to train Ghanaian High
School graduates as medical students in Cuba.
Dr. Kwabena Opoku Adusei and Joseph Yieleh Chireh
In
the arrangement elaborated by the former Minister of Health, it would
cost the nation GH¢10, 132, 024.00 to train 200 students to study
medicine in Cuba each year and approximately GH¢60.80 million for the
next six years (the total duration of the study).
Also
in the arrangement, an amount of GH¢48,189 would be spent on another 50
students per annum to receive specialist training in that country. In
total, the government of Ghana is expected to spend approximately
GH¢74.35million on the project.
Information gathered by
DAILY GUIDE indicates that for the first year, 2012, Ghana is expected
to spend about GH¢14.50million as the first tranche of payment.
Widespread Condemnation
Nana
Akufo-Addo said, "The initiative [is] far from accelerating the
delivery of medical care for our people, we would have used that money
much better in empowering the medical institutions in our country to
deliver and produce more doctors."
The GMA said the
total cost of training could be used to bolster medical infrastructure
in the country to train far more medical students locally.
Dr Adusei-Poku, in May, advised government to review its policy on the Cuban deal.
"The
government is taking a huge sum of money into this Cuba medical
training when it could have been channeled into improving our local
medical schools like Korle-Bu Teaching hospital or the Ghana Medical
School," he told Accra-based Citi FM.
"The maternity
rooms in Komfo Anokye have been there for the last 40 years and they
still have only-one-and-a-half theatre tables. Are we not throwing the
money away?"
The Deal
It is unclear why President Mahama, then the Vice President, brokered the deal.
The medical exchange which, begun under the PNDC dictatorship in 1983, had no cost implication to the Ghanaian taxpayer, then.
President
Mahama, under a Revised Cuban Agreement, during his April 2011 trip to
Havana, brokered this multi-million-dollar deal on behalf of Ghana,
contrary to what was reported on the official website of the Cuban
Embassy in Ghana.
Contrary to all the financial
implications being trumpeted by the Ghanaian government, the Cuban
government gives an impression that the deal is actually a gratuity. On
its official website, it stated, "Under the agreements, the Cuban
government will provide scholarships for all the 250 students who were
selected from deprived communities throughout the country and would be
ready to come back to serve their communities…"
DAILY
GUIDE gathered that the Presidency, Ministers and the Scholarship
Secretariat, were made to submit a 'protocol' list of 138 individuals,
whilst the Office of the then Vice President and that of the National
Security Coordinator, Lt. Col. Larry Gbevlo-Lartey (rtd), increased the
number with a supplementary list of 41 names to benefit from the
scheme.
By: Raphael Ofori-Adeniran
http://www.dailyguideghana.com/?p=65639
Thursday, November 1, 2012
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